spencer's synthetic philosophy. 



Part IV.- 



1. The Nature of Intelligence. 



2. The Law of Intelligence. 



3. The Growth of Intelligence. 



4. Reflex Action. 



9. 



•Special Synthesis. 



5. Instinct. 



6. Memory. 



7. Reason. 



8. The Feelings. 

 The Will. 



Part Y. — Physical Synthesis. 

 1. A Further Interpretation need- 6. Functions as related to these 



ed. 



2. The Genesis of Nerves. 



3. The Genesis of Simple Nervous 



Systems. 



4. The Genesis of Compound Ner- 



vous Systems. 



5. The Genesis of Doubly Com- 



pound Nervous Systems. 



Structures. 



7. Physical Laws as thus inter- 



preted. 



8. Evidence from Normal Varia- 



tions. 



9. Evidence from Abnormal Va- 



riations. 

 10. Results. 



Appendix. 

 On the Action of Anaesthetics and Narcotics. 



CONTENTS OF VOL. II. 

 Part VI. — Special Analysis. 



Limitation of the Subject. 

 Compound Quantitative Reason- 



3. Compound Quantitative Reason- 



ing (continued). 



4. Imperfect and Simple Quantita- 



tive Reasoning. 



5. Quantitative Reasoning in gen- 



eral. 



6. Perfect Qualitative Reasoning. 



7. Imperfect Qualitative- Reason- 



ing. 



8. Reasoning in general. 



9. Classification, Naming, and Rec- 

 ognition. 



The Perception of Special Ob- 

 jects. 

 11. The Perception of Body as pre- 

 senting Dynamical, Statico- 

 Dynamical, and Statical Attri- 

 butes. 



The Perception of Body as pre- 

 senting Stati co-Dynamical and 

 Statical Attributes. 



10 



12 



13. The Perception of Body as 



presenting Statical Attri- 

 butes. 



14. The Perception of Space. 



15. The Perception of Time. 



16. The Perception of Motion. 



17. The Perception of Resist- 



ance. 



18. Perception in general. 



19. The Relations of Similarity and 



Dissimilarity. 



20. The Relations of Cointension 



and Non-Cointension. 



21. The Relations of Coextension 



and Non-Coextension. 



22. The Relations of Coexistence 



and Non-Coexistence. 



23. The Relations of Connature and 



Non-Connature. 



24. The Relations of Likeness and 



Unlikeness. 



25. The Relation of Sequence. 

 26. 

 27. Results. 



